|
- abbreviations - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
I found the following on Urban Dictionary h t hat tip; tip of the hat Apple is releasing their <insert new slick thingmabob here> H t to <insert blog here>, who alerted us of this story Senator Holierthanthou has been caught with his pants down in public H t to originalposter who broke the news So it sounds like the author is acknowledging the reader "Mr D", giving him credit for
- When to use run vs when to use ran - English Language Learners . . .
My friend is writing some documentation and asked me an English question I don't know the answer to In this case which would it be? CCleaner has been run or CCleaner has been ran
- idiomatic language - Meaning of manually in manually detect . . .
Manually can refer to something done by a person rather than through an automated process AngryJoe could be referring to having to search the internet for specific sentences of a copyrighted work to find out if it has been used elsewhere without permission
- phrase request - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Is the task explicitly (i e manually) created by the user only after those conditions are met? Or is the task automatically created by the app when those conditions are met? If the user creates the task manually, then the active voice would be preferable if there are other tasks which do get created automatically:
- Hyphenate “communicating”: communi-cating or communic-ating?
I'll note that "hyphenation" is not taught at school, and children would not normally learn hyphenate manually, and would not be expected to do so They would learn to read hyphenated texts, but this is not a skill that really needs practice
- I will see if I cant make somthing, what does the cant mean?
You noted that you understood it from context, but for clarity in this answer, the phrase: "I will see if I can't make something " means "I will see if I can make something " To be clear, both constructions are 100% grammatically correct They have very slightly different meanings but are used nearly interchangeably The former literally means that they will check to see if something is
- Manual vs manually - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Manually is the adverb Manual is (in this context) the adjective Tuning can be either a verb or a noun; however, in your example, tuning the weights is a gerund phrase using the verb Here you want to modify the verb within the phrase, so use the adverb: The procedure requires manually tuning the weights If instead you wanted to modify the noun tuning, use the adjective The procedure
- Beautiful vs Beautifull - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
On my spell checker, beautifull is underlined in red; it seems the OP has manually included the erroneous spelling in their phone's dictionary The OP is only asking which spelling is correct, and this question is easily answered in any dictionary
|
|
|